Digital Abrahamic Research Library
Comparative study of sacred scripture, prophetic transmission, theological continuity, textual preservation, and divine revelation across the Abrahamic traditions.
The Torah section investigates Mosaic tradition, covenant theology, divine law, prophetic foundations, sacred history, and textual development within the Hebrew Bible.
Special attention is given to revelation, prophetic succession, theological representation, semantic structures, and textual tensions within the Pentateuch.
The Gospel section studies fulfillment traditions, prophetic continuity, reinterpretation of earlier scripture, theological development, and messianic expectation.
Particular focus is given to the Paraclete passages, revelation, continuity with earlier prophetic traditions, and the transformation of theological language.
The Qur’anic section examines final revelation, prophetic restoration, divine speech, scriptural continuity, and theological clarification across the Abrahamic tradition.
The project studies how the Qur’an revisits earlier narratives, clarifies theological tensions, and presents revelation through a unified prophetic structure.
Comparative study of revelation, prophetic speech, sacred transmission, and divine communication.
Tracing prophetic succession, expectation traditions, and future-oriented revelation across scripture.
Studying manuscript traditions, textual variants, preservation history, and transmission structures.
Examining continuity, reinterpretation, doctrinal development, and theological transformation.
This project investigates the transmission history of scripture through manuscript traditions, translation history, scribal development, and textual preservation.
Studies include the Masoretic Text, Dead Sea Scrolls, Septuagint traditions, Codex Sinaiticus, Codex Vaticanus, and early Qur’anic manuscripts.
Scripture is approached as revelation, transmission, interpretation, theological representation, and historical memory.
The project seeks to understand how sacred texts preserve continuity while simultaneously reflecting linguistic, theological, and historical development across traditions.